shockedcanadian
Diamond Member
- Aug 6, 2012
- 38,187
- 36,734
- 2,905
Trump is applying the effort to return Canadas auto industry back to America. He also wants fair access to financial services and operations on par with Canadas Schedule 1 banks, lumber and dairy. He will succeed in time especially if he moves away from the USMCA which is what I suspect he intends to do.
Canada and their police state apologists on here can't blame me, I warned Canada for decades. The impending theft of my home reinforcing the 30+ years of persecution against my persons.
Perhaps the most costly home in Canada. We sided with the wrong system as our anti-Americanism has lead is to a sharp and permanent decline, economically AND socially.
The ever-increasing threat of tariffs from our southern neighbour seems to be the only thing on people’s minds these days. While their implementation has been more on-again, off-again, in the first few months of 2025, their full impact would be financially burdensome for Canadian businesses across all sectors.
A new analysis from the Public Policy Forum conducted by Navius Research examines the potential impact on each province, as well as how Canada may be able to hit back via retaliatory tariffs.
"We undertook this study to provide quantitative guidance to policymakers in real-time," Inez Jabalpurwala, the forum’s president and CEO, said in a statement.
"The work reveals emergent areas of focus for Canadian leaders, including the urgent development of east-west, and west-east trade in Canada and beyond."
Sectors in every province would experience a form of decline, from gasoline and diesel refined in New Brunswick, aluminium exports from Quebec, steel and automobiles from Ontario, potash and uranium from Saskatchewan and oil and gas from Alberta.
Canada and their police state apologists on here can't blame me, I warned Canada for decades. The impending theft of my home reinforcing the 30+ years of persecution against my persons.
Perhaps the most costly home in Canada. We sided with the wrong system as our anti-Americanism has lead is to a sharp and permanent decline, economically AND socially.
The ever-increasing threat of tariffs from our southern neighbour seems to be the only thing on people’s minds these days. While their implementation has been more on-again, off-again, in the first few months of 2025, their full impact would be financially burdensome for Canadian businesses across all sectors.
A new analysis from the Public Policy Forum conducted by Navius Research examines the potential impact on each province, as well as how Canada may be able to hit back via retaliatory tariffs.
"We undertook this study to provide quantitative guidance to policymakers in real-time," Inez Jabalpurwala, the forum’s president and CEO, said in a statement.
"The work reveals emergent areas of focus for Canadian leaders, including the urgent development of east-west, and west-east trade in Canada and beyond."
Sectors in every province would experience a form of decline, from gasoline and diesel refined in New Brunswick, aluminium exports from Quebec, steel and automobiles from Ontario, potash and uranium from Saskatchewan and oil and gas from Alberta.